A day after New England grabbed Super Bowl XLIX in the final seconds, the Nets did the same, going on a 12-2 run over the final 71 seconds to come from behind and stun the Clippers, 102-100, on Monday in front of 16,037 who braved the elements to make it to Barclays Center.

“That was crazy,” Jarrett Jack said after knocking down the game-winning jumper with 1.3 seconds remaining. “Everything went perfectly right.

“You couldn’t even script it that way. Spike [Lee] couldn’t make a better movie.”

When these two teams met less than two weeks ago in Los Angeles, the Clippers won by 39 points in a game that often felt like the teams were separated by twice as many points, with Blake Griffin and DeAndre Jordan throwing down one rim-rocking dunk after another.

The Nets admitted they came into this one determined to make sure it played out differently.

“We knew we had to make it a fight,” Alan Anderson said, “because we didn’t want them to think that was us in L.A.”

The Nets (19-28) did make it a fight for three quarters, keeping the Clippers largely in a halfcourt game and other than a few ferocious dunks by Jordan, who finished with 22 points and 20 rebounds, the Nets mostly kept their much more athletic opponents at bay.

But the Clippers (33-16) ripped off an 18-9 run to begin the fourth quarter, and after Jordan tapped in a missed Chris Paul floater to give Los Angeles a 98-90 lead with 1:11 remaining, it looked as if this meeting would end the same way as the first.

No one told the Nets, however, who surged back into the game behind a 3-pointer from Deron Williams — playing in his first game since Jan. 7 due to fractured rib cartilage — and then another from Joe Johnson that made it 98-96 with 48.1 seconds left, and came after he missed a pair of free throws, only for Brook Lopez (24 points) to tip the offensive rebound back out to him behind the arc.

“Never,” Johnson, who had 22 points, five rebounds and six assists, said with a smile and a shake of the head when asked if that had happened to him before. “In my 14-year career, me getting up there, missing two crucial free throws and it bouncing back to me for a 3 … that’s crazy.”

The crazy didn’t stop there, as after Paul missed a jumper, the Nets got the ball with a chance to tie or take the lead. Jack used a Lopez screen, then found Anderson in the corner for an open 3 in almost the exact spot Bojan Bogdanovic had one late in Friday’s overtime loss to the Raptors.

While Bogdanovic missed, Anderson’s shot only hit the bottom of the net with 15.3 seconds left while he was falling to the floor after being run into by Blake Griffin. That sent Anderson to the line for a four-point play and Griffin to the bench with six fouls.

“When it left my hand,” Anderson said, “I knew it was going in.”

After Anderson made the free throw to give the Nets a two-point advantage, Paul drove past Williams and tied the game at 100 with a layup with 8.6 seconds left. That gave the the Nets yet another chance to win a game at the buzzer.

Unlike nearly every other time this season, though, coach Lionel Hollins put the ball in the hands of someone besides Johnson, giving Jack the ball and running another pick-and-roll with Lopez. Jack got the switch he was looking for when Jordan moved onto him, then knocked down a mid-range jumper for the lead.

“I don’t know if [Hollins] was aware I wasn’t having my best shooting night tonight,” Jack said, “but I guess he liked the matchup we had.

“I just figured I could make a move, and I honestly waited too long to try anything else [but shoot]. … I said I just went into my bag [of tricks] a little bit, and I was able to get a clean look, and luckily I knocked it down.”

The Clippers still had one final chance. But after the ball was inbounded to Spencer Hawes he tried to pass it into the corner. The ball was tipped and the Nets snapped their four-game losing streak, getting their first home win since Dec. 29 as they went from another loss to a stunning win in the span of 71 short seconds.

“I thank God for the fact that they did win,” Hollins said, “because I am proud of them.”